I have long believed that "unfair" is a silly term to use regarding golf.
The simple fact is that the whole damned sport is unfair. Making a list of the ways it is unfair would take days--or weeks.
I prefer to think about shots, holes, and situations as being unreasonable. When golf presents an unreasonable shot, hole or situation, it becomes unfun in a hurry.
It is absolutely unreasonable to set up a green so that the only way to get a putt in the hole is to either make the first one, or keep putting from 6 feet below the hole until one goes in.
It is unreasonable to expect golfers to play down 15-yard-wide fairways bordered by tall rough or water hazards.
It is unreasonable to force every single player to hit a 290-yard fade off the tee if they want to avoid making a double bogey.
Any hole that can't be finished by the average 25 handicapper is unreasonable. FWIW, I think the 17th at TPC Sawgrass is borderline unreasonable. If it had a way of playing up to the left, so that you could get on in three or four without challenging the water, I think it would be a better hole.
Hard is one thing, impossible is another thing entirely.
Maybe I have been biased by playing a lot of golf with women who hit it 120 yards off the tee, but I can tell you that they enjoy the game as much or more than my single-digit handicap friends.
BTW -- I played The Old Course with just such a woman, and her caddy was the captain of St. Andrews University golf team.
He quickly figured out how far she could hit it, and adapted his advice to her ability. I can only say that the lines he gave her off some tees were inspired.
It was part of a two week trip of golf, and her husband had told he early on that if she wanted to play out of a pot bunker, go aheahd, but don't beat yourself up trying to get out.
On #12 at TOC she was in a particularly tough one, and her caddie took one look and said, "Looks like a hand wedge, eh m'am?"
Golf ain't fair.
But it can try to be reasonable.
K